The simple secret Big String hates

I accidentally shaved off my beard a few days ago.
This has happened before, so I was careful this time – carefully set the length with the length-setting dial. Started with my moustache because I wanted to leave the beard long, just trim up the edges.
However, the clipper protection cage is apparently how this clipper adjusts length – the dial slides the cage in and out, controlling its distance to the clipper element – and it seems to have been improperly clacked onto the clipper with the result that despite setting the dial to a moderate length, it shaved off one third of my moustache, leaving me with two-thirds of a moustache and a bare spot where the final third should have been.
I know from experience that had I tried to symmetrize my moustache by shaving a third away from the other side I would’ve been left with a rather narrow bit under my nose, a moustache that went out of style here in Austria in 1945. Yeah so anyway back to the drawing board.
Speaking of drawing board I have been looking for something to do with all the fibers in my garden so I fell down a Youtube rabbit hole of DIY twining/stringmaking tutorials.
Did you know that twine making is probably the oldest human cultural… thing? That led to everything else?
Like, after twisting some twine from the leaves of day lilies in our garden and… enjoying how soothing it is to just sit there and twine for hours while chatting on the terrace, I began to wonder what one does with all this twine. I finally found a website that had a list of things you can do. Three of their suggestions were, seriously, “wrap it around a stick, wrap it around a rock, wrap it around a seashell…”.
Did you know that the oldest man-made fibers discovered so far (and they were probably making string before this but being organic traces are harder to find) were found in a 90,000 year old Neanderthal settlement? My friends and family do! So string-making… predates homo sapiens? Or at least, homo sapiens have no monopoly on it.
And when you have all this string, it leads to other things.
You ask yourself, what am I going to do with all this fucking string? I am going to need a vehicle to move it around (invents wheel). I am going to need a bag to hold it in (invents weaving). Ack my bag fell apart (invents sewing and knitting).
Etc etc.
Actually I stumbled onto string-making while looking at basket weaving tutorials, after finding out that one harvests willow switches in the winter. So to kill time until then I started clicking videos of basketry-adjacent stuff in the right margin and the rest is history.
My wife used some of my twine without asking first to tie up the roses, I was shocked at first but I suppose that was ok, proved it works, and plenty more where that came from.
Feels nice to be out from under the boot of Big String.

A brief Christmas play

(Lights come up)

(Living room, a woman is decorating a Christmas tree, radio plays Christmas songs. Cat sleeps on sofa)

Man (seated at table, repairing ornament): Fuck, I glued the bird to my finger.

(Fade to black)

(The End)

The international ukulele tuning schism, and the nature of passion

A friend called me after orchestra rehearsal, while I was sitting around the music school trying to compose something for soprano, theremin and cash register in time for my meeting with the composition teacher and asked whether I could help him hang three acoustic panels from his dining room ceiling, as he had discovered it was a three-person job, not a two-person job as he had planned. I said yes and he came over and gave me a lift to his house, and we stood on chairs and held up the panels while his wife tried to hook them to hooks he had put into twelve holes he had drilled into the ceiling, but it turned out he had measured the ceiling incorrectly and would need to re-drill the holes. So his wife gave me a lift back to the music school and I had my meeting and then drove back to his house and we tried it again and it worked fine. Then we stood around discussing whether the panels curved too much, hung the way they were, from the corners only, but I convinced him it was fine but to keep an eye on them and if the curvature increased at all maybe add some hooks in the middle after all. And we chatted and traded malapropisms like a couple cautionary characters from a 2009 remake of Reefer Madness until I raised the topic of ukuleles, because he had promised me a ukulele a long time ago because he had some extra ones left over from a class he had been teaching.

I felt kind of sleazy, basically asking for a ukulele that way, but a promise is a promise, and I had just helped him hang acoustic panels. I got my pick of white or green (I took green, since St. Patrick’s Day is just around the corner) and a sheet showing tablature chords.

When I got home, I googled how to tune the ukulele after Beta complained it was out of tune and everything I played sounded atrocious (as if tuning it would make my playing less atrocious) and discovered a million ukulele sites. So I twittered Pam, who responded immediately with the information that the ADF#B tuning I was using was popular in Britain and Tin Pan Alley (and by extension Europe, I guess, Europe being an extension of Tin Pan Alley) while the Hawaiian tuning is gcea.

There is an international ukulele tuning schism, who knew? So I’m fucked, basically. How is this supposed to work? Do I use the European tuning, which all the ukulele players I know here use (my friend with the ceiling) or do I use the Hawaiian tuning, which strikes me as more appropriate for a Hawaiian instrument (although, okay, it was imported from Portugal, right, which makes it European, but today, you think Hawaii when you hear ‘ukulele’) and is used by all the American ukulele players I know (Pam)?

It would be a serious quandary, were there anything serious about my ukulele playing. I guess the solution would be to get a second uke, and learn both tunings, but who has the time for something like that? Although, dobro ukes look pretty cool.

Anyway, on an unrelated subject, my cello playing seems to lack temperament. This sort of came out during my cello lesson last night, when we worked on a tune that must be played with temperament. I spent this morning thinking about the word temperament. Is the root temper, or tempera? What about ramen?

I think the word was being misused last night, in fact, and the tune in question called for passion, and not temperament, the latter being the term for, you know, an individual’s personal combination of sanguine, phlegmatic, melancholy or choleric. I mean, okay, I tend to be pretty much a straight-ahead phlegmatic temperament with a little melancholy, more sanguinity on a good day, choleric only in traffic or when my wife pushes my buttons. But I think the tune called for passion, or emotion, and not, say, more cholera.

Cholera, the new cowbell.

My teacher tried to rouse me from my phlegma by yelling at me, and I didn’t even notice until another teacher came in to see WTF he was yelling at. What he fails to grasp, I guess, is the fact that my phlegma is the sole thing standing between him sitting on a chair in the classroom and him describing an arc to the parking lot outside.

That phlegma is locked in tight, baby.

I dunno. Maybe a little green soprano ukulele is a good instrument for me. I associate ukes with sanguinity. My playing currently sounds like cross between Arthur Godfrey and a concussion, but who knows, after a little practice?

I don’t see it solving my passion problem, though. Infusing my cello playing with passion would require something stronger, I think. Electrocution maybe. Those of you with passion, how do you do it? It seems to be absent from every aspect of my existence, at least those perceptible to me.

How is passion done, earthlings?